Can anyone recommend a good book to learn GoLive? I love the 'Visual Quickstart' guides, but I don't see one for CS as of yet...<br><br>Always good to be prepared. <br><br>[color:red]5.19.05 - The 'Jedi Slaughter' tour begins!</font color=red>

PS for layouting and then I would say coding by hand is THE best way to do sites. WYSIWYG apps just get in the way. Download TextWrangler (and StyleMaster if you're new to CSS) and start coding! Once you get the hang of it, you'll never go back.<br><br>

I *do* code a lot by hand these days (BBEdit), but I like a program such as DW for tweaking and being able to preview my changes without having to constantly refresh in a browser...<br><br><br>[color:red]5.19.05 - The 'Jedi Slaughter' tour begins!</font color=red>

<blockquote><font size=1>In reply to:</font><hr><p>I *do* code a lot by hand these days (BBEdit), but I like a program such as DW for tweaking and being able to preview my changes without having to constantly refresh in a browser...<p><hr></blockquote><p>You know, you can preview with BBEdit. I personally use TextMate. I find many of the "features" of DW end up hurting the site in the long run. You have more control doing it by hand.<br><br>

GoLive for dummies is probably what you need, since you already understand the concept of HTML, it's really just a "what button do I push to xxxxxxx" type of book you need. GoLive is fairly easy to learn compared to Dreamweaver.&#10;&#10;That being said, I wouldn't rush out and buy a whole lot of GoLive books if I were you, I'm fairly certain that Dreamweaver isn't going anywhere. <br><br><br><br>CreativeGuy: For your "fix" of design software tips, tricks & commentary.

Yeah, it's more a matter of learning what tools are where. I guess it won't be that big of a shock, though, considering my limited use of WYSIWYG programs nowadays...<br><br>[color:red]5.19.05 - The 'Jedi Slaughter' tour begins!</font color=red>

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